You're quite welcome, Adele! Pictures, :yahoo:! I can see those 2 middle toes. One of them seems necrotic at the tip.
The waxworms had one advantage. That way she got her antibiotic Baytril 2.5%. Now give her several days to get hungry prior to offering her mealworms and crickets.
The best advice I can give is to get one of those large terra cotta hides with the basin on top from Amazon UK very soon. Place this hide on the warm end close to the warm dry hide. Use sphagnum moss in the bottom as a bedding. As long as you keep the basin filled with water, the humidity inside will be ideal for shedding prep and for daily humidity needs.
It's time-consuming keeping kitchen roll wet/damp in any typical warm hide. Anything you place inside (kitchen roll, sphagnum moss, or Eco Earth's coco fiber) quickly dries out.
You've mentioned your leo's wooden vivarium = 2.5 feet long. That's 30 inches (76 cm). I believe that adding the
large terra cotta hide I linked will help your leo's sheds. It's soooo easy to keep up the humidity inside that terra cotta hide, because those hides "breathe". That terra cotta hide provides a leo with relatively constant humidity inside one of the warm hides. A leo needs warm dry,
warm humid, and cool dry hides.
Cut an entrance in a plastic container like this with a soldering iron. Another option is to cut the entrance hole out of the lid. That keeps coco fiber inside better. Place this hide on the warm end of her enclosure right next to her warm dry hide.
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